EIGHT
IOSeBURS FftWS-REVIEW, R6SEBURS, ORESOR, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1944.
Officer Assigned
To Enlist Women
In Naval Reserve
With Douglas county women
showing increased Interest in the
Women's brunches of the service,
the Waves enlistment headquar
ters In Portland has assigned
Ivy Quale, potty officer second
class, to duty In Roseburg for the
week of July 24 through 29.
Although Ine navy Is reported
to have reached its strength In
male enlistments, the need for
young women to serve at the na
vy's many shop; establishments Is
very urgent.
Young women of Roseburg and
vicinity are urged to talk to Miss
Quale during her visit here. She
will be prepared to assist them
BUY BONDS!
FRESH HALIBUT
and
CHINOOK SALMON
Lean Pork Roasts
lb. 29c
HAMS AND BACON
GALORE
Syrup, Va gal. jars. Brand
new shipment No limit.
WE CARRY A COMPLETE
LINE OF GROCERIES.
Wo Custom Slaughter.
See ub early as our schedule
la crowded.
BUY BONDS!
DOUGLAS
MARKET
230 N. Jackson
Telephone 350
Good Butter Takes
No More
You can get the best by asking for
MEL O-MAID BUTTER
None Better
at your grocers.
MADE BY DOUGLAS COUNTY CREAMERY
Bring us your cream we pay top prices.
Jackson and Douglas Telephone 340
WEST COAST VICTORY
CARNIVAL
ONLY TWO DAYS LEFT!
Ride on the
SCOOTER HI-DE-HO
TILT A WHEEL
MERRY-GO-ROUND
SEE THE
MARVEL AT
SEE
FREE . . . Featuring . . . FREE
Bob Mathews and King Tuffy the
Lton with the Human Brain
In completing applications for en
listment In l;io women's reserve
of the United States navy. Miss
Quale will be on duty from 9 a.
m. until 6 p. m. daily at the navy
recruiting station In the Roseburg
chamber of commerce offce. Ap
pointments for evening Inter
views for those who find it Irr.
possible !o gi-i in during the day
can he made by calling 370 or
the lltnpiua hotel.
Guam Island Invaded
By Yankee Land Forces
(Continued from page 1)
of fighting. Tt was believed the
Guam garrison was as strong as
Saipan's, .vhich consisted of more
than 20,000 troops on D-day, .Tun"
11. The Americans had to kill 95
per cent of that force before gain
ing victory.
In the Interior the Americans
will encounter the same hills,
caves and crevices which gave
Saipan's defenders a tremendous
edge over the attackers.
Guam, 32 miles long and four
to ten miles wide, was overrun
by 8,000 Japanese troops who
stormed ashore against 200 ma
rines in the early days of the war.
All the other Marianas Islands to
Ihe north were Japanese, who
thus had all the advantages
against the Isolated American
garrison.
The Island has one of the Paci
fic's finest harbors, Apra, and
formerly served as a way-station
on the trans-Pacific air route to
the East. It supports a native
population of nearly 22,000. Its
area Is about 225 square miles.
Top Commanders On Job
Rear Adm. Richard L. Conolly,
who commanded the amphibious
force at Sicily and Salerno, and
directed the conquest of Roi and
Manur in the northern Kwaja
Icln atoll, Is directing the amphib
ious operations against Guam. He
was awarded the distinguished
service medal for his Marshall
islands operations.
Ma. Gen. Roy S. Golger, U.
S. marine corps, as commander
of the third amphibious corps, Is
commanding ail expeditionary
troops. Gelger landed marines on
Guadalcanal and Bougainville.
Fifth fleet operations remain
ed under command of Adm. Ray
mond A. Spruance, who has had
the same command In the Gil
berts, Marshalls and at Saipan.
Vice Adm. Marc A. Mitscher's
task force continuing the great
aerial smashes that began in the
Marshalls and continued through
the Truk and earlier Marianas
strikes, and throughout the Mar
ianas invasion operations.
Points!
SKY RIDE
FERRIS WHEEL
ROLLO PLANE
MOST AMtZING SIDE SHOWS
THE WORLD'S LARGEST GORILLA
THE PARADE OF FREAKS
Auspices American Legion, Roseburg
SHOW GROUNDS ON HIGHWAY 99 NORTH
Richardson Drops
Hawaii Rule Title
HONOLULU. Hawaii. .Tulv 21
-ipUI t. fVn. Rnbfrt r. Plrh
nrrtnn nlaVit rr0lnoit''h'''t ,,,
Mtlp nf rnlllfnfv po'"'-nor nf
ii'iil 'tnrl snM Mo ft "Iff vonl'l h"
iirvlpr tW ntfnc f)f
of of Intrrnpl sfrurMy.
Tho 'chnnrt dons not end Tin
W'H's rnnrHiiJ sl'tiiK. now
ijprlor Mtri' In IJ S court.
Conor) Richardson said In a
statement:
"T hnitpvp th.it the tftlr tr
crtTMmrt lt; ni"rnsp and I h;'vc de
cided thft necssarv seen r't"
mpnjNirns under the m-event mod',
flefl fort" of pvirtlal 1'iw cn ji,tp.
ni:,Uv he taken care of hv U
imncc of directives or orders bv
virtue of mv title of comrf ntVnrr
pener'd of the central Pacific
area."
fin Sun Francisco on .Tulv 1
the TJ, S. circuit court of anno-ls
ho"H ph?rfip; (hit (hp piiltiv
in Hawaii h'd without necesvitv
UKUrned civil law and thtf r'htc
nf eiH'"ins were tra rntjled uoop
ithio (he Trivernn-innt co'intfifed
nlfh f).cet ions that marti'd ;iw
in the island was necw-v to
security and tb'il acts of rniiHnry
courts were lpal and dld.)
RIood Purae Follows
Effort to Kill Hitler
(Continued from pace 11
n Fast Prussia, ,now besieged by
Russian troons.
The British nrcss saw sirrns of
ip annroachinc final smashun of
'he German armv. One London
nherver declared, "there seems
nn doubt that an armv revolt Is
t"l on and that a state of civil
war ezists In the reich"
An unconfirmed renort printed
in Stockholm's Afton1ldninrn
--aid the reported attemnt on Hit
ter's life occurred during the
"nncellor's unal conference at
Obrsalburp. The exnlosion was
ald to have hnpn caused bv a
Mme bomb. Hitler was renorted
u . ha ve esca ned been use he a r
rived two minutes late and was
tandinrr at a donrwav of the con
ference room when the bomb ex
olodcd six feet awav.
SoeaklnfT m aniyrv and strident
tnns in an earlv morning broad
nast on!v a few limns after Rerhn
'nnnunced he had escaped death,
Hi'..,- declarer):
"At an hour in which the Oer
miin. amv Is waidiiK a verv hard
snifple thei-e has anneared in
Cermanv a verv small roun simi
lar to that in Jtalv I auuarcnt Iv
a reference to the Italian ui'ien
dei last S(t)tembtM Hi which ne
lieved that it could thrust a da
"er Into our back as it did in
1918. Hut this lime they have
made a mistake.
"I personally am cut irelv un
hurt apart from neflieible
"razes bruises or burns." Hit
lev said in relating what he call
ed "the details about a crime
that has no equal in derma n his
tory." Swedish newspaner stories ap
peared to be based mostly on re
ports from the German under
ground (Atlantic Sender) radio.
Thev included unconfirmed re
nort s 'hat' 1. A peace government
'ed hv such deposed German uen
rpl officers as von Rundslcdt,
Falketihausen. Hal ler, von Hock
nd von Brauchitsch was beirn
formed and uainine snpimrt all
over Germany ; and 2. that an SS
division had been sent to Berlin
to keep order.
E Bond Sri os Mounting
PORTLANP. .tulv 20 (AIM
Oregon's K bond sales mounted to
S.'U .;)S;i.057 vsterday. and state
bond officials predicted the stale's
SiH.OtXUXlO quota would be tilled
before the July .'11 deadline.
Nearly a million dollars in
sales were recorded veslcrdav.
Ride on the
OCTUPUS
A Solid Mile of Glittering Fairy
Land of Fun for
Everyone
Wallace Boost Lead in
Fight for Renominction
(Continued from page 1)
not recorded.
The vice president, Mr. Roose
velt's first choice for his running
mate, previously had come out
ahead In a spilt of the Ohio dele
gation which gave him 21 of its
f)2 votes, and assigned !i fur Tru
man.
Wallace Needs 220 More
The action of the three states
boosted Wallace's pledged and
claimed votes lo 3(191, with 20
counted from New York and Hit- 1
ed Truman to 171, counting 70 in
New York. Tor nomination, 580
are required. Rhode Island added
10 to Truman soon thereafter.
Meanwhile, Senator John Bank
head of Alabama swung up as a
new threat from the south. With
Alabama's 24 promised to him on
the first ballot, he collected Mis
sissippi's 20 at a caucus today.
.Texas regulars decided to give
him 22J on the first ballot which
brought his potential total on that
test to GGJ.
Senator IX Worth Clark said
Idaho would go for Wallace, add
ing another 10 votes, and Nevada
decided lo give seven of its eight
votes to Wallace after : first bal
lot 'complimentary vole for Sena
tor Joseph (',. O'Mnhonoy.
"We're gaining all the time,
I hey can't stop us now," declar
ed Senator Joseph (Jul fey, a Wal
lace partisan.
Truman Backers Dubious.
Truman's Iriends remained out-,
wardly confident, but a confer
ence of leaders during the early
morning hours was reported to
have developed some doubt that
the big-city organizations could
deliver for him the vote they 1
had expected.
There were reports that If
, thev found Truman could not
. make the grade, they might shift
! swiftly to cither Senator Barklev
or to Senator Scott Lucas of Illi
nois. ! Walk-Away for Roosevelt.
President Roosevelt was re- .
! nominated for a fourth term
! overwhelmingly last night by
; a convention that booed the
mention of opposing candi
dates. i The convention made short
shrift of the anti-fourth term
movement, giving Senator
Harry F. Byrd of Virnlnta
i only 89 votes, with a single
vote recorded for James A.
Farl'ey who once was Mr,
.Roosevelt's No. 1 political
strategist.
Letter Taken as Boost.
The vice president's backers
took in stride the disclosure yes
terday by Tarty Chairman Han
negan of a "Hear Boh" letter from
Mr. Roosevelt which said the
president would he "very t'lad to
run" w ith cither Trueian or I Mug
las and expresesd the belief that
either of tbe would bring
i strength to the ticket.
Cuming out oi a conference in
which the Wallace strategists fig
ured themselves into more than,
TiOO votes on the first ballot. Sena
tor (hiffev told reporters:
"I think Ihe letter was a fun
damenlal error. 11 will nominate
Wallace."
U. S. Should Keep Tried
Men, Roosevelt Asserts
'Continued trom page 11 !
saw Ihe danger . . . who met it
head on."
The voters loo will determine,
he said, whether thev will turn
over Ihe post war tasks "to those
who offered Ihe veterans of the
last war breadlines and apple
selling "
Mr Roosevelt lifted up his rec
ord from the early new- deal day's
through the pre-war worldwide
jitters and down to now. lie said
this election will he influenced
bv that record "written on ttie
seas, on the land and In Ihe
skies."
It is writ 1 en also he said in the
figures on war production and
food output, on the international
food conference, the clobal relief
setun known as 1'NRRA. the At
lantic charter drawn with
Churchill on the hiijh seas and
hN conferences at Cas ihlanca. at
Cairo, at Moscow, at Teheran.
Future Security Stressed
Tbe IVesident said it seems
"wholly likelv that within Ihe
next four vrars" the war will be
won and the world will take up a
":vstem v. tiirh w e hone will pre
vent" another conflict That's
when he said that "new hands
will then have full opportunity
lo n
the idi'.ik which we
eek "
The
President inicctcd his col-
le;i"ues into the picture. ;m well
is himself, when he s.iiil he had
"the best staff in our hi-dorv" do
ing the war ioh and now "study
ine the problems nf t, future."
II.' summed up Hie job ;die.id:
"l-'irst. to win 'the war t, win
it fast, tn w in it overnnw eringly. '
Second .to form worldwide inter
nation.il organizations ;ml to ir-r.-mge
to use the armed foro-s of
the sovereign nations to make
another war impossible within
the foreseeable future Third, to
build an eoonomv for our return
in.,' veterans ami for all Ameri
cans which will pnnido employ
ment ami decent standards of
living " i
Trio Kent Secret i
Mr Konsevolt. accompanied by
his ton militarv aides, reached the
Pacific naval base Wednesday
night after a six-day transeonti-i
I
l
Betsy Ross, 1944
yVM i i
! Ct A., frV 't
(Army Radwjiholo from NEAJ
Interested family and friends
gather 'round the little French
girl in photo above, watching
her make an American flag. Un
able lo buy one to greet her
heroes, the Yanks, she got busy
With needle and thread.
From high above the Jap South
Pacific stronghold ol Rabaul. the
ambitions of 35.(100 Oklahoma
City school children were real
ized vhen a scroll, G5 feet long,
bearing u defiant letter to ihe
Japs and the children's signa
tures, was dropped with a load
of bombs on the enemy airfield
Dt Rapopo Photo above shows
crew of Marine Corps B-25
bomber look ing over scroll be
fore the takeoll.
Bemedaled Padre
Most decorated chaplain in this
Alhert John Hoffman,
above, of Dubuque. Ia., awarded
the Distinguished Service Cross
at the Percy Jones General Hos
pital, Battle Creek. Mich Award
was given for extraordinary
bravery in Italy, where Chap-
lain
HnMm.m lost his left leg.
He nlso holds Purple Heart and
Silver Star, latter given fur
bravery hi African action.
nental trip which was locked in
tbe secrecy of military security.
Only a few hundred people .
saw the presidential train as it
moved through 1(1 statesa sharp
contrast to the multitudes which
jammed the route of presidents
iu peace time. Few of those who
happened to see the train man
aged to guess the identity of its
No. 1 passenger. He never let
himself be simmi.
The piTsideni's fondness for his
Seotty, Kala, tipped the trip to
some spectators who happened to
see the black pup being exercised
along Ihe railroad sidings and j
Identified him almost Instantly. I
ill
, j
1 Si '
Small Arms Ammunition ,
For Sportsmen Favored
WASHINGTON, July 21 (AP)
Ammunition manufacturers
recommended today that small
arms ammunition be provided to
sportsmen for the full game
hunting season, on the basis of
en improved supply situation. The
War Production board promised
a decision within three weeks.
England Again Strafed ;
By Nazis' Flying Bombs
LONDON, July 21 (AP) Sal
vos o flying bombs exploded In
London and south England today
and Home Security Minister Mor
rison, in a grave speech, urged
mothers to evacuate the capital
has everything necessary for those crisp
salads, so refreshing and cooling
these summer days.
YOU CAN DEPEND ON GRIMM'S FOR
GOOD FOOD AT GOOD VALUES
OPEN
EVENINGS
sf
and other danger zones.
"We are tackling this new
weapon with all we know and all
we have got and we shall beat
It, but we have not beaten It yet
and the strain on the housewife
and her children may get worse
before It Is finally and complete
v removed," Morrison said.
" The attacks last night started
lust after dark, ending a 12-hour
lull in the assaults. Both casual
ties and damage were reported.
Lands In 5 Counties Closed
SALEM, Ore., July 21 (API
State Forester N. S. Rogers has
closed to entry, except by permit,
lands in five northwest Oregon
counties because of fire hazards.
The lands are In Clatsop, Wash
ington, Columbia, Tillamook and
Yamhill counties. The procloma
tions are effective next Monday.
reft
Y
The place of Sicks' Select in public esteem is one which
is completely its own a place won and held by the
unmatched smoothness and unvarying quality of this
superbly distinctive beer.
A Sicki' 2uaUUf. PnoJtuct
SICKS' BREWING COMPANY SALEM, OREGON
Speed Ihe Victory Buy War Bonds
Boy Drowm In Cooi River
MARSHFIELD, Ore., July 21
(AP) Dan Delfer, 9-year-old son
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Delfer,
Marshfield, drowned In the Coos
river yesterday after a tumble
from a freighting launch. -
NOTICE
H. A. CANADAY
has moved his law office
from the Kohlhagen Build
ing to 115 West Cass
Street in the building with
Qulne & Co.
D
OPEN
SUNDAYS
urn